Court records: Former MSU dean William Strampel sexually harassed students, had pornography on university computer

Special prosecutor Bill Forsyth reads a list of charges former dean of MSU College of Osteopathic Medicine William Strampel will be arraigned on during a press conference at the G. Mennen Williams Building in Lansing on Tuesday, March 27, 2018.
Nick King/Lansing State Journal

EAST LANSING - The former dean of MSU's College of Osteopathic Medicine was arraigned Tuesday on charges of felony misconduct in office, fourth-degree criminal sexual conduct and two additional misdemeanors in East Lansing's 54B District Court.

Four women told investigators that, while they were medical students at MSU, Dr. William Derkey Strampel, 70 either sexually harassed or sexually assaulted them, court records say. The women said he made sexually inappropriate comments, groped them and appeared to offer them favorable treatment in exchange for sexual acts.

Investigators also say they found pornographic images on Strampel's computer, some of which appeared to be "selfies" from MSU students.

Warrants were issued for Strampel on Tuesday morning by Judge Richard Ball, who arraigned Strampel in the afternoon via a video connection. Strampel had been in custody since Monday night, which he spent in the Ingham County Jail.

The charges are the first related to a Michigan Attorney General's Office investigation of sexual misconduct at Michigan State Universitythat was announced in January amid two sentencing hearings for disgraced sports medicine doctor Larry Nassar. Nassar, who sexually abused hundreds of patients, worked for Strampel.

Strampel served as dean of the College of Osteopathic Medicine from 2002 until December, more than a year after Nassar was charged. Strampel stepped down for medical reasons. He remains on the faculty, though he is on medical leave.

Ball set a personal recognizance bond at $25,000, meaning Strampel can be released without payment but would be required to pay $25,000 if he fails to appear in court. Ball also ordered that he not contact victims or witnesses, that he have no contact with current or past medical students and that he not travel out of state. A preliminary hearing was set for May 3.

Strampel denies inappropriately touching anyone and denied that there was any "quid pro quo for sexual favors in exchange for any type of standing within the university’s medical school," John Dakmak, Strampel’s attorney told reporters after the arraignment. He added that Strampel had no romantic or sexual relationships with any medical students.

Two of the misdemeanor charges Strampel faces relate to the 2014 Title IX investigation of Nassar, during which Strampel received regular updates.

Dakmak said it was the responsibility of the Title IX investigator, not Strampel, to follow up to ensure Nassar was following protocols put in place after the Title IX investigation.

"The idea that my client neglected his duty, that will be mete out in court," Dakmak said. "And we expect to prevail on that."

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Former MSU dean William Strampel appears on a screen in Judge Richard Ball's courtroom.(Photo: Bob Khilips / Lansing State Journal)

The misconduct in office charge carries a maximum sentence of up to five years in prison. The sexual assault charge is a high court misdemeanor, which means it carries a two-year maximum sentence. The willful neglect of duty charges carry a one-year maximum each.

The AG's investigation is being led by special prosecutor William Forsyth and Forsyth's first request to MSU for documents revealed Strampel was an early focus.

During a news conference on Tuesday, Forsyth said his investigation received a credible tip about Strampel so it obtained a search warrant before the university could provide documents. Asked if the search was a political stunt, Forsyth said, "We did what we felt we needed to do" and the search led them to where they are now.

The willful neglect of duty charges relate to Strampel's actions during and after Nassar's 2014 Title IX investigation, according to the affidavit.

The felony charge relates to a series of sexually inappropriate comments made to at least four female students as early as 2006, according to the affidavit filed by Michigan State Police Det. Lt. Ryan Pennellin support of the charges.

Special prosecutor Bill Forsyth, center, speaks during a press conference annoucing the charging of former MSU dean of Osteopathic Medicine William Strampel on Tuesday, March 27, 2018, at the G. Mennen Williams Building in Lansing. Standing by, from left, are Assistant Attorney General Williams Rollstin, MSU detective Ryan Pennell, Chief Deputy Attorney General Laura Moody and Assistant Attorney General Christina Grossi Nick King/Lansing State Journal

William Strampel, former Dean of Osteopathic Medicine at Michigan State University attends a video arraigned in 54-B District Court Tuesday, March 27, 2018 in East Lansing, Mich. Robert Killips | Lansing State Journal

Special prosecutor Bill Forsyth speaks during a press conference announcing the charging of former MSU dean of Osteopathic Medicine William Strampel on Tuesday, March 27, 2018, at the G. Mennen Williams Building in Lansing. Nick King/Lansing State Journal

Criminal Division Lead Trial Attorney William Rollstin is in 54-B District Court at the arraignment of William Strampel, the former Dean of Osteopathic Medicine at Michigan State University Tuesday, March 27, 2018. Robert Killips | Lansing State Journal

Judge Richard D. Ball listens to the responses of former Dean of Osteopathic Medicine at MIchigan State University William Strampel as he is arraigned in 54-B District Court Tuesday, March 27, 2018 in East Lansing, Michigan. Robert Killips | Lansing State Journal

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Allegations from three of the four victims involve misconduct during meetings with Strampel to discuss low test scores. One alleged inappropriate behavior by Strampel on at least four occasions over four years.

The university has an open investigation of Strampel by its Office of Institutional Equity that includes potential Title IX violations, MSU spokeswoman Emily Guerrant said. She added that the investigation started in December.

Additional details from the affidavit include:

In either 2006 or 2007, Strampel had a conversation with a woman, identified only as Victim 4, at a local flu clinic and turned the conversation to drinking. He then said how "it was good when women were drunk, because then it was easy to have sex with them."

During the college's annual ball in 2010, Strampel approached the woman from behind and grabbed her right buttock. The woman didn't report it then, she told police, because she "did not want to be thrown out of medical school."

A forensic examination of Strampel's work computer found about 50 photographs of "bare vaginas, nude and semi-nude women, sex toys, and pornography," according to the affidavit. Police said many of the photos appeared to be "selfies" of female MSU students and that it appeared someone had tried to delete the photos. Strampel solicited nude photos from at least one female student, the affidavit says.

"Also uncovered on Strampel's work computer were pornographic videos and a video of Dr. Larry Nassar performing 'treatment' on a young female patient," the affidavit said.

Dakmak said it's likely that the video referenced in the affidavit is one of the ones Nassar used to teach his techniques around the country.

In 2011, a woman identified as Victim 2 fell asleep in class and Strampel summoned her to his office later. He told her not to sit down but to turn around twice so he could observe her body, she told police, before going on a rant degrading her body.

The woman told police Strampel told her she needed to dress sexier if she wanted to advance in her profession. The conversation lasted about an hour and Strampel never brought up a reason for the meeting.

Years later, she met with Strampel again to address complaints about her surgical residency. When she walked in the room he again told her to turn around twice. He later told her that she needed to learn her place in life and said, "what do I have to do to teach you to be submissive and subordinate to men?", according to the affidavit.

In 2014, Victim 2 attended a university event as a recipient of a scholarship. She was called up to take a picture with Strampel and he reached around and grabbed her "left buttock and gripped it firmly," according to the affidavit.

Months later at a luncheon he walked up to her and slowly looked her up and down. She was uncomfortable and asked him to look at her face, and he responded, "eye candy is eye candy."

Also in 2014, he met with a female student identified as Victim 3 who had failed an exam. When she walked into his office, she later told police, he scanned her body up and down several times.

She asked permission to retake the exam and Strampel told her she could if she signed a contract saying she'd drop out if she failed.

She fell one point short of a passing grade when she retook the test, and when she met with Strampel he suggested she become a centerfold model as a backup career. He told her she could take the test a third time, but she would be required to do anything for him, and said if he called her on the weekend or to "weed the garden" she would have to do it.

She later told police she understood this to mean that she was being asked to do anything he wanted sexually in exchange for the favor.

In February, interim MSU President John Engler took steps toward firing Strampel by starting the process to revoke his tenure. He also announced that MSU would no longer pay for Strampel's legal defense.

"Some of the allegations about his personal conduct, especially conduct toward students, are disturbing," Engler said in a statement reacting to the charges. "Today's charges confirm our belief that he has fallen short of what is expected and required from academic leadership. They are not in alignment with this university's values and they never have been."

Jamie White, an attorney who represents more than 30 women and girls suing MSU over abuse involving Nassar, said in a statement that details connected to Strampel's charges are not surprising.

"We pleaded privately and publicly for an independent investigation in February of 2017 those requests fell on deaf ears until the entire country was exposed to this disaster through the victim impact statements of more than 250 women," he said.

"We will never know how much evidence has been lost, tampered with, and destroyed over the course of the last several years."

Strampel had been Nassar's boss for several years, including in 2014, when Nassar was the subject of a criminal investigation and a university Title IX investigation stemming from Amanda Thomashow's report that Nassar sexually assaulted her during a medical appointment.

Strampel received regular updates on the progress of the Title IX investigation and communicated directly with Nassar during it, documents show.

This approval is the basis for one of the willful neglect of duty charges.

The investigation found that Thomashow, then a recent MSU graduate, likely misinterpreted what Nassar did as sexual assault because she didn't understand the "nuanced difference" between that and osteopathic medical procedures. MSU has refused to reopen that investigation; earlier this month Thomashow asked the U.S. Department of Education to reopen it.

After the investigation, Nassar and Strampel met and agreed on three protocols required for Nassar to return to clinical duties, but those protocols didn't include a mechanism to ensure compliance. Strampel later told MSU police he never intended to follow up on the protocols because they were common sense for all physicians and because Nassar had been exonerated, according to a police report the State Journal obtained through a public records request.

Strampel's handling of the protocols after the investigation is the basis for the second willful neglect of duty charge.

Dakmak, Strampel's attorney, defended his client's action following the Title IX investigation, saying that the university's Title IX office and Office of General Counsel were both aware of the protocols, and that the Title IX office gave Strampel a "positive response."

The criminal investigation by the MSU Police Department continued 16 months after the Title IX review concluded. During that time, MSU allowed Nassar to see patients. Ingham County prosecutors denied a warrant request for a misdemeanor sexual assault charge in that investigation.

At least 20 women and girls have said Nassar abused them after the close of the Title IX investigation, records show. The Title IX investigation ended with two reports. The one given to Thomashow had a shorter conclusion section than the one given to Nassar, Strampel and the university.

The State Journal reported in January that the report given to Nassar and Strampel found Nassar's conduct could open the university to lawsuits and expose patients to “unnecessary trauma based on the possibility of perceived inappropriate sexual misconduct.”

In 2017, Nassar pleaded guilty to three child pornography charges prosecuted by the U.S. Attorney for the Western District of Michigan and 10 sexual assault charges that were prosecuted by the AG's Office. The MSU Police Department led the investigations. Nassar is serving a 60-year sentence in a federal prison in Arizona.

Many of the sexual assault charges related to abuses at MSU, and several for abuses that occurred after the close of the Title IX investigation.